(1.) Request for adjournment is declined. On 28.2.2003 when the matter was taken up for admission, Mr. Kulkami who now says he is the Manager of the complainant, stating himself to be the authorised rapresentative sought time on the ground that Counsel was not availale that day. Complaint was adjourned to 21.5.2003. On the adjourned date also, an adjournment slip was circulated on behalf of the complainant and the matter was adjourned to this day. Today again Mr. Kulkami states that the advocate is not availale. Managing Director or any Director of the complainant is also not present. We put it to Mr. Kulkami to argue the matter. He expressed his inability to do so. We, therefore, ourselves proceed to examine the complaint.
(2.) In this complaint filed under Section 21 of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986, there is a claim of Rs. 50 crores "by way of damages and actual loss occurred due to deficiency in service" by the Bank of India, the opposite party. The complaint was filed on 21.8.2002. There are no particulars as to how the amount of Rs. 50 crores has been arrived at. The alleged deficiency against the Bank is that it had no reason to refuse or avoid or delaying the proposal for grant of loan to the complainant and that this amounted to "deficiency in service in view of the provisions of Consumer Protection Act". It is stated that the complainant is and was having ability and credibility. The non-action on the part of the Bank on the application for loan of the complainant pending for more than 3 years amounted to deficiency in service.
(3.) The complaint contains many superfluous averments unrelated to facts of the case and it mentions that since for more than 5 years of its proposal, it could not get assistance from the Bank nor could it complete the full-fledged project, the complainant had to suffer a lot and incurred heavy losses resulting the complainant forced to file a reference with the BIFR under the SICA Act for rehabilitation/restructuring.